Produktbild: Oxford Handbook of Dance and Reenactment

Oxford Handbook of Dance and Reenactment

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

13.12.2017

Herausgeber

Mark Franko

Verlag

Oxford University Press

Seitenzahl

680

Maße (L/B/H)

25/17.5/4.1 cm

Gewicht

1202 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-931420-1

Beschreibung

Rezension

Overall, this volume provides an invaluable platform for profound engagement with a complex layering of possibilities and experiments in which documentary and remembered evidence of past dances dialogues with the reality of present-day corporeality. Dance Research

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

13.12.2017

Herausgeber

Mark Franko

Verlag

Oxford University Press

Seitenzahl

680

Maße (L/B/H)

25/17.5/4.1 cm

Gewicht

1202 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-931420-1

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  • Produktbild: Oxford Handbook of Dance and Reenactment
    • Contents

    • 1. Introduction: The Power of Recall in A Post-Ephemeral Era

    • Mark Franko

    • Phenomenology of the Archive

    • 2. Tracing Sense/Reading Sensation: an essay on imprints and other matter

    • Martin Nachbar

    • 3. Giving Sense to the Past: Historical D(ist)ance and the Chiasmatic Interlacing of Affect and Knowledge

    • Timmy de Laet

    • 4. Martha@...The 1963 Interview - Sonic Bodies, Seizures and Spells

    • Richard Move

    • Historical Fiction and Historical Fact

    • 5. Reenactment, Reconstruction and Dance Historical Fictions

    • Anna Pakes

    • 6. Bound and Unbound: Reconstructing Merce Cunningham's Crises (1960)

    • Carrie Noland

    • 7. The Motion of Memory, the Question of History. Recreating Rudolf Laban's Choreographic Legacy

    • Susanne Franco

    • Proleptic Iteration

    • 8. To the Letter: Lettrism, Dance, Reenactment

    • Frédéric Pouillaude

    • 9. Letters to Lila and Dramaturg's Notes on Future Memory: Inheriting Dance's Alternative Histories

    • Kate Elswit with Rani Nair

    • Investigative Reenactment: Transmission as Heuristic Device

    • 10. (Re)enacting Thinking in Movement

    • Maaike Bleeker

    • 11. Not Made by Hand, or Arm, or Leg: The Acheiropoietics of Performance

    • Branislav Jakovljevic

    • 12. Pedagogic In(ter)ventions: On the Potential of (Re)enacting Yvonne Rainer's Continuous Project-Altered Daily (1969/70) in a Dance Education Context

    • Yvonne Hardt

    • Enacting Testimony/Performing Cultural Memory/ Spectatorship as Practice

    • 13. What Remains of the Witness? Testimony as Epistemological Category: Schlepping the Trace

    • Susanne Foellmer

    • 14. Baroque Relations: Performing Silver and Gold in Daniel Rabel's "Ballets of the Americas"

    • VK Preston

    • 15. Reenacting Ritual Dance-Theater of India: The case of Kaisika Natakam

    • Ketu H. Katrak with Anita Ratnam

    • 16. Gloriously Inept and Satisfyingly True: Reenactment and the Practice of Spectating

    • P.A. Skantze

    • The Politics of Reenactment

    • 17. Blasting out of the Past: the Politics of History and Memory in Janez's Reconstructions

    • Ramsay Burt

    • 18. Reenactment as Racialized Scandal

    • Anthea Kraut

    • 19. Reenacting Modernist Time: William Kentridge's The Refusal of Time

    • Christel Staelpart

    • Redistributions of Time in Geography, Architecture, and Modernist Narrative

    • 20. Quito-Brussels: A Dancer's Cultural Geography

    • Fabián Barba

    • 21. Dance and the Distributed Body: Odissi and Mahari Performance

    • Anurima Banerji

    • 22. Imagined Re-embodiment between Text and Dance

    • Susan Jones

    • Epistemologies of Inter-temporality

    • 23. Affect, Technique, and Discourse: Being Actively Passive in the Face of History: Reconstruction of Reconstruction

    • Gerald Siegmund

    • 24. Epilogue to an Epilogue: Historicizing the Re- in Danced Reenactment

    • Mark Franko

    • 25. The Time of Reenactment in Basse Danse and Bassadanza

    • Seeta Chaganti

    • 26. Time Layers, Time Leaps, Time Lost. Methodologies of Dance Historiography

    • Christina Thurner

    • Reenactment in/as Global Knowledge Circulation

    • 27. (In)distinct Positions: The Politics of Theorizing Choreography

    • Jens Richard Giersdorf

    • 28. Scenes of Reenactment/Logics of Derivation in Dance

    • Randy Martin

    • 29. A Proposition for Reenactment: Disco Angola by Stan Douglas

    • Catherine M. Soussloff

    • 30. Dance (Re)searching its Own History: On the Contemporary Circulation of Past Knowledge

    • Sabine Huschka

    • Afterword

    • Notes After the Fact

    • Lucia Ruprecht